There is never an exact mention of where Midian is, but it is in the wilderness not far from Ancient Egypt. Most likely, given the fact that Jethro returned to Moses after Moses crossed the Red Sea, Midian would have been in the Sinai Peninsula.
He lived until the age of eighty in the region (not city) of Goshen, in or near the Nile Delta, presumably not far from one of the two towns, Pithom or Raamses. See also:more about Moses
Here the two people only from Egypt to see the promised land were Joshua and Moses. Please kindly note Even though Moses was not allowed to set his foot in the promised land of Canaan , he was shown the land by God from a far distance.
The Bible tells us that 600,000 fighting men were among the Israelites who left Egypt, that they took much of Egypt's precious metals, 'borrowed' from their masters, and that an entire army of Egyptians was destroyed in pursuit of the Israelites. Having lost so much of its productive capacity, military power and wealth, Egypt should have faced enormous economic and social strains. Yet, the detailed records available to us for the centuries before and after the time of the Exodus show Egypt continuing to enjoy a period a unprecedented prosperity and in full control of Palestine as the occupying power until around 1200 BCE.Some claim that the Ipuwer Papyrus is evidence of the problems portrayed in Exodus, most notably because of its statement that "the river is blood" and its frequent references to servants running away, but the Ipuwer Papyrus is far too early, having been written no earlier than the late Twelfth Dynasty (c.1991-1803 BCE). The arguments ignore the many points on which Ipuwercontradicts Exodus, including that its Asiatics are arriving in Egypt rather than leaving.On the best information available, nothing of note happened to Egypt following the Exodus. In fact, Israel Finkelstein says that over 90 per cent of scholars believe there never was an Exodus from Egypt as described in the Bible.
The Exodus occurred in about 1441 BC (according to 1 Kings 6:1) and so it was not long before that. At the most only a year or two - this is because we don't know how long it took Moses to travel back to Egypt or how long the process of deliverance which led to the Exodus took.
Until almost the middle of the first millennium BCE, the Persians were wild mountain tribesmen who had little contact with the outside world, lived far from Egypt and would have been ill-suited to Egyptian life. Whoever Moses was, he could not have been a Persian. The name 'Moses' seems to be of Egyptian origin, but that does not mean either that he was Egyptian or that he ever lived in Egypt. It could equally mean that the story of Moses had some origins in earlier Egyptian legends.
Egypt is in Africa. Egypt is in Africa. Positioned far north of the continent
177 Miles
"Too far to travel for you"
Do eels travel Far
It allows for speedy travel between North and South Egypt, especially in antiquity when boats were far faster than camels.
victor moses by far!